Abstract

Th e present Coolabah volume , nr 15, flows from the January 2014 Watershed congress at the University of Barcelona, organized by the Philology Faculty‟s Centre for Australian Studies (ASC) in collaboration with the Centre for Peace and Social Justice (CPSJ) at the University of Southern Cross, Australia. A call was put out to de legates to elaborate conference presentations into full - fledged essays of academic length (5,000 to 8,000 words), and a select number of scholars ha s contributed to the making of this collection of blind - peer - reviewed essays . The resulting volume , as is us ual with our post - congress issues , covers a wide range of topics relating to the congress theme — Watershed — and so offer s an eclectic , yet therefore challenging mix of papers within the field of postcolonial and cultural studies . Part of what is left after t he water has been shed and the streams of conversation have settled down becomes visible in this compilation. The following will lay out some of the strands occurring and concurring in these pieces , which each in one way or another address the trope of watershed.

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